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J Dent Educ. 67(9): 1034-1038 2003
© 2003 American Dental Education Association
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Journal of Dental Education, Vol 67, Issue 9, 1034-1038
Copyright © 2003 by American Dental Education Association


Articles

Building the minority faculty development pipeline

PE Gates, JH Ganey, and MD Brown

The shortage of faculty in dental education is well documented, but the data also show a shortage of minorities in postgraduate programs, which develop future faculty. In the last ten years, ADEA's effort to address minority issues in dental education has made some progress. In addition, examples of pipelines for minority faculty development that have shown some success include: a partnership between Harlem Hospital and Columbia University School of Dentistry and Oral Surgery in which the school dedicates one position in its postgraduate training programs to an individual participating in the Harlem Hospital General Practice Residency program; a partnership between the National Dental Association Foundation and Colgate-Palmolive Company, which provides scholarships for advanced dental education study; and the Bronx Lebanon Hospital Center Department of Dentistry, which enrolls underrepresented minorities in its General Practice Residency Program, a new Pediatric Dentistry Residency Program, and a unique program providing hands-on experience in HIV/AIDS health care policy and AIDS development management. Critical elements in the relative success of these programs are environment, selection criteria, mentoring, networking, and finance. The true measure of the outcomes is still to be seen.


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C. S. Smith, T. V. Ester, and M. R. Inglehart
Dental education and care for underserved patients: an analysis of students' intentions and alumni behavior.
J Dent Educ., April 1, 2006; 70(4): 398 - 408.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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